Blocking transmission of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) in llamas by vaccination with a recombinant spike protein

Abstract

The ongoing Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) outbreaks pose a worldwide public health threat. Blocking MERS-CoV zoonotic transmission from dromedary camels, the animal reservoir, could potentially reduce the number of primary human cases. Here we report MERS-CoV transmission from experimentally infected llamas to naïve animals. Directly inoculated llamas shed virus for at least 6 days and could infect all in-contact naïve animals 4-5 days after exposure. With the aim to block virus transmission, we examined the efficacy of a recombinant spike S1-protein vaccine. In contrast to naïve animals, in-contact vaccinated llamas did not shed infectious virus upon exposure to directly inoculated llamas, consistent with the induction of strong virus neutralizing antibody responses. Our data provide further evidence that vaccination of the reservoir host may impede MERS-CoV zoonotic transmission to humans.

Document Type

Article

Document version

Published version

Language

English

Pages

12

Publisher

Taylor & Francis Open

Published in

Emerging Microbes and Infections

Grant Agreement Number

EC/PF7/115760/EU/Zoonotic Anticipation and Preparedness Initiative/ZAPI

EC/H2020/731014/EU/Veterinary Biocontained facility Network for excellence in animal infectiology research and experimentation /VetBioNet

Recommended citation

Rodon, Jordi, Nisreen M. A. Okba, Nigeer Te, Brenda van Dieren, Berend-Jan Bosch, Albert Bensaid, Joaquim Segalés, Bart L. Haagmans, and Júlia Vergara-Alert. 2019. "Blocking Transmission Of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-Cov) In Llamas By Vaccination With A Recombinant Spike Protein". Emerging Microbes & Infections 8 (1): 1593-1603. Informa UK Limited. doi:10.1080/22221751.2019.1685912.

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

Attribution 4.0 International

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